* and then matt-nc declared
>
> >She was on the grass, many different shades... any idea of the best way
> >to replace the pixels i accidently took off of her chin?
>
> Zoom in to highest magnification, use the clone tool to select shades from
> the nearby facial area and reconstruct it by
She was on the grass, many different shades... any idea of the best way
to replace the pixels i accidently took off of her chin?
Zoom in to highest magnification, use the clone tool to select shades from
the nearby facial area and reconstruct it by hand.
Might not be the best way but you can do
* and then Bob Long declared
> On Wednesday, September 22, 2004 6:59 PM [GMT+1=CET],
> Nick Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Well, im no expert yet but i reckon this aint a bad attempt ;-)
> > http://www.stylesheet.org/sam.png
> >
> > She was on the grass, many different shades... any
On Wednesday, September 22, 2004 6:59 PM [GMT+1=CET],
Nick Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Well, im no expert yet but i reckon this aint a bad attempt ;-)
> http://www.stylesheet.org/sam.png
>
> She was on the grass, many different shades... any idea of the best
> way to replace the pixels i a
* and then Nick Wilson declared
> Thanks ever so much, that's great. It doesnt look all that difficult if
> you have a little patience, i guess it also helps to select roughly
> around the subject on a varied background so you have less pixels to
> choose by color
Well, im no expert yet
* and then olivier ripoll declared
> Although the gimp interface has changed since it was written, have a
> look at this section of the excellent "Grokking the gimp":
>
> http://gimp-savvy.com/BOOK/index.html?node47.html
>
> Read the whole chapter about selection and masks if you have time.